FACTS which contradict what is taught in the universities and which even run counter to the assumptions made by critics of misandry.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Women in Power: Aristocratic Female Serial Killers

The desire to wield power over others is as old as humanity.
“Empowerment” was, in the past, usually identified with sociopathic impulses.
This was preceding the top-down social engineering protocols that have been
promoted by the government/corporate partnership, that has during the second
half of the 20th century, taken over all aspects of western society.

Children have been trained to perform for rewards – a method
designed by behaviorist psychologists who believe than people are nothing but
animals that can be trained to behave in any manner the trainers wish. Moral
relativism has been inculcated into children by the rule-makers as a
replacement for the age-old imperative of self-mastery. This makes it easier
for the “empowered ones” to control the docile and impulsive public.

Here are some stories of “empowerment” that might
possibility challenge portions of politically correct dogma we have been
inundated with our entire lives.

The subject of gynarchy and specious feminist claims of
female rulers’ superior sense of justice is conveniently outlined in the excellent
overview of the subject: “Fingering the Gynarchy” (by Tawil, A Voice for Men, Sep. 1, 2013).

This collection was originally designed to include
aristocrats exclusively. The original title is retained, but some high-ranking
elected officials and totalitarian bureaucrats, most of whom have been involved
in genocide, have been added.

“In a seven-year
period, between the ages of fifteen and twenty-two. Messalina murdered dozens
of imperial courtiers, many of whom had managed to survive the psychopath
Caligula, only to perish at the urgings of Messalina, merely because they were
friends of one of her illicit lovers or had witnessed some aspect of her
misconduct.” [Vronsky]

Fredegund is said
to have strangled the Queen Galswintha in order to marry the king and to have murdered her three stepsons. Because her first two sons died in infancy, she accused a number of women
of witch craft and had them tortured. She is also reputed to have ordered the assassination of
Sigebert I of Austrasia in 575 and also to have made attempts on the
lives of Sigebert's son Childebert II, her brother-in-law Guntram, king of
Burgundy, and Brunhilda (sister of Galswintha).

According to traditional accounts: She suffocated her own
newborn daughter, accused the empress of the crime, and then replaced her. She
killed or exiled their supporters and countless others; she murdered twelve
branches of the imperial family; she purged the scholars and killed or exiled
them and their families; she had the crown prince Li Hong poisoned.

According to the chronicler Brantome, she used to lure the
handsomest young officers in the army to her retreat, the Tour de Nesle, and
then, “having obtained what she wished of them, caused them to be tied in a
sack and thrown into the Seine.”

She was married four times, to William Outlawe, Adam le
Blund, Richard de Valle and, finally, Sir John le Poer who suspected he was
being poisoned. On his death, the children of her four husbands accused her of
using poison and sorcery against their fathers and of favouring her first-born
son William Outlawe.

The Maldives have had a few women in charge but [Sultana]
Khadija [or Khadeejah] was one you wouldn’t forget. She probably came to power
after murdering young brother. In 1363 her husband tried to take over so she
killed him too. Ten years later her second husband tried the same thing and me
a similar fate.

Countess Bathory
and four collaborators were accused of torturing, sexually mutilating and
murderinghundreds of girls, with one
witness attributing to them over 650 victims, though the number for which the
defendants were convicted was 80. A description of her method:
“Elizabeth rose up on her bed and bit the girl on the cheek. Then she turned to
the girl’s shoulders, where she ripped out a piece of flesh with her teeth.
After that, Elizabeth proceeded to bite the girl’s breasts.”

She poisoned her husband, Mahatissa, surnamed The Robber [Cora-Niiga, or Niiga the rebel, or robber], and ascended the
throne. In the course of five years she married and killed five husbands and was finally put to death by her step-son. Donna Catherina is not
acknowledged as a queen by the Sinhalese chroniclers.

According to the Marquis de Sade’s Philosophy in the
Boudoir, Nzinga was a woman who "immolated her lovers." De Sade's
reference for this comes from History of Zangua, Queen of Angola. It
claims that after becoming queen, she obtained a large, all male harem at her
disposal. Her men fought to the death in order to spend the night with her and,
after a single night of lovemaking, were put to death.

Marie de Brinvilliers was reported to have poisoned fifty or
more victims. Prior to murdering her father, who opposed her marriage, and then
her two brothers to seize an inheritance, Marie experimented with poisons
concocted by her lover in hospital charity wards, where she began volunteering
to care for patients. She carefully observed the effects of her poison on the
patients, adjusting the doses accordingly.

Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova was a Russian serial killer and noble. Saltykova was a Russian noble from
Moscow who became notorious for torturing and killing and torturing 138 female
serfs. She beat them with logs and rolling pins and reportedly mutilated their
genitals.

“With a fanaticism that would have made Mary Tudor proud,
she came up with creative and inventive ways to eliminate any one caught
practicing Christianity. They were tortured, flung from cliffs, boiled in
water, poisoned, flung off cliffs or beheaded if they didn’t recant.”

We were told that she had become the wife of the previous
Sultan, after having killed two husbands; that she was not his first wife, but
that the present Sultan was her son;that she had put him in succession to the throne by the simple process
of poisoning his elder brother and sister, who were not her children, and their
mother;and that she had then poisoned
her husband, whichmade her son the
Sultan.

The Empress of Abyssinia is believed to have murdered ten
husbands in her climb to the top and her manic desire to wield power. A number
of highly instructive aphorisms expressing the ruthless philosophy of the
feminine art of empowerment have been attributed to her.

This case is, it goes without
saying, does not feature an aristocrat, yet, in the modern world, collectivist
dictatorships do indeed operate very similarly to feudal systems. Thus one
could argue that this woman, who eventually became vice president of Communist
Russia, enjoyed an above-the-law elite government status equal perhaps to a
duchess or a countess. Rosalia Zemliachka, or Rozalia Samuilovna Zalkind (Russian: Залкинд Розалия Самуиловна), (20 March 1876
– 21 January 1947) was nicknamed “Devil” and “Fury of the Communist Terror” for her personal participation
in mass murders of prisoners following the Civil War.

►1976 –
Jiang Qing “Madam Mao” – People’s Republic of China

Jiang Qing, actress formerly
a film actress known as Lan Ping, was the wife of Mao Tse Tung (Zedung),
Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, became the leader of the notorious Red
Guards who were charged with detroying all vestiges of traditional culture,
brutally persecute “virtually all engineers, managers, scientists,
technicians,” regardless of their loyalty to Communist rule. A vindictive
gandiose sociopath, Jiang Qing behaved as if she were Empress of China.

She
arranged for the murder and torture of her political opponents. She arraged
Zhou Enlai’s adopted son (Sun Yang) and daughter (Sun Weishi) to be tortured
and murdered by Maoist Red Guards. In 1968 Jiang forced Zhou to sign an arrest
warrant for his own brother. She was nicknamed “The White-Boned Demon,” after
her eventual fall from power.

In 2001,
the United Nations court established that between April and June 1994 that
mother-and-on genocide-perpetrators – Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, Rwanda’s former
minister for family and women affairs, and her son, Arsene Ntahobali, a former
militia leader – with assistance of the extremist Hutu militia known as the
Interahamwe, went to Butare and abducted hundreds of ethnic Tutsis.

“Many
were physically assaulted, raped and taken away to various places in Butare,
where they were killed. During the course of these repeated attacks on
vulnerable civilians, both Nyiramasuhuko and Ntahobali ordered killings. They
also ordered rapes. Ntahobali further committed rapes and Nyiramasuhuko aided
and abetted rapes,” said the judgment read out by presiding Judge William
Sekule. [“Rwandan woman is first ever convicted of genocide,” theGrio, June 24, 2011]

Bijana Plavsici, popularly known as “The Serbian Empress,” a biology
professor turned politician who called herself “The Serbian Iron Lady” (evoking
Stalin’s fabricated name, which means “iron”) was convicted of war crimes
committed during the Bosnian War (1992-1995) by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia December 16, 2002, the result of a plea bargain allowing her
to avoid trial on genocide (ethnic cleaning series of mass murders) and a large
number of other war crimes charges. She served only a portion of her prison
term and was released October 27,
2009.

As the former president of Republika Srpska, she led
Bosnia-Herzegovina in conducting genocidal murders against Bosnian Muslims
during the 1990s. Her public pronouncements advocating ethnic cleansing, which
she termed a “natural phenomenon,” detailing that six million Serbs needed to
be exterminated, rallied her followers to commit massive and ruthless war
crimes.

In 1992, a widely-circulated photographed showed her stepping over
the body of a dead Muslim civilian to kiss the notorious Serb warlord Zeljko
Raznjatovic, known as Arkan.